A scatter plot is a type of graph that shows how one variable changes in response to another. It is used to identify relationships and patterns between two variables.
A line graph is typically used to show the relationship between two variables and how one variable changes when the other variable is changed. The x-axis represents one variable and the y-axis represents the other variable. Lines connecting data points show how the variable being measured changes as the other variable changes.
Yes the y-axis is the dependent variable where y is a function of x the independent variable.
A straight line on a graph indicates a linear relationship between the dependent variable and the independent variable. This means that as one variable changes, the other changes at a constant rate, resulting in a line with a steady slope.
The vertical axis on a graph typically represents the dependent variable or the response variable. It shows the quantity being measured or observed in relation to the independent variable on the horizontal axis.
The independent variable is typically plotted on the horizontal axis in a graph. This variable is typically manipulated or controlled by the experimenter and is plotted horizontally to show how changes in it relate to the dependent variable.
No. It shows changes in the response variable against changes in the explanatory (or independent) variable(s).
.Has an x-axis and a y-axisShows how a variable changes in relation to another variableShows the independent variable on the x-axis
The independent variable causes changes in the dependent variable; the dependent variable is contingent on the manipulations of the independent variable.
In a graph, the dependent variable is typically placed on the vertical axis (y-axis). This is because the dependent variable is the one that changes in response to the independent variable, which is plotted on the horizontal axis (x-axis). By convention, the y-axis represents the outcome or effect being measured, while the x-axis represents the input or cause.
The manipulated variable is your independent variable. This gets plotted along the x-axis on a graph, and your dependent variable gets plotted along the y axis. Example- think of a velocity-time graph (physics), or a dose-response graph (pharmacology). The variable you are able to control (like time or dose) is your manipulated variable, and the variable whose value is contingent on how you manipulate the first is your dependent variable (drug response etc.)
A line graph is typically used to show the relationship between two variables and how one variable changes when the other variable is changed. The x-axis represents one variable and the y-axis represents the other variable. Lines connecting data points show how the variable being measured changes as the other variable changes.
The independent variable is plotted on the horizontal axis, or x axis. The dependent variable, or response variable is plotted on the vertical axis, or y axis.
Scatter plots show how much one variable is affected by another,A graph that uses points connected by lines to show how something changes in value
a line graph
A line graph is most useful for representing how one variable influences another variable.
Yes the y-axis is the dependent variable where y is a function of x the independent variable.
A straight line on a graph indicates a linear relationship between the dependent variable and the independent variable. This means that as one variable changes, the other changes at a constant rate, resulting in a line with a steady slope.